The
hammer is essentially a masculine force, and when striking or crushing it
represents justice and revenge. The hammer is not only a tool; it represents
might. When paired with an anvil, represents ANDROGYNE, and
with that often fertility and creation. The hammer is the thought while the
anvil is the brain.

It
is used often by the gods; it is Thor's most valued (but often lost)
possession. They use it for destruction, protection and fertilization, but it
also symbolizes immortality. Destiny is linked with the hammer too, as well as
violence and manual labor.

"The
two-headed hammer is an ambivalent symbol of the mountain of Mars
and of sacrificial Inversion" (Cirlot, 137).

A
carrot or a super leaf will transform Mario into a half-rabbit/half-man or into
a half-raccoon/half-man, respectively.For the Globalist Elite who are intent on convincing everyone that
gene-mixing of different species of plants, animals, fungi, etc. is perfectly
safe, this seems like a convenient way to gently brainwash youngsters whose
heads are ever in the pixelated clouds of the Mushroom Kingdom that there is
nothing wrong with such things.

The
names Mario and Luigi are reminiscent of Italy, whose culture is still very
much associated with the rise of the Renaissance.And the Renaissance was not just a revival of
classical literature, painting, and so forth, but the revival of dark arts like
alchemy.

During
the Renaissance,
Hermetic and Platonic foundations were restored to European alchemy. The dawn
of medical, pharmaceutical, occult, and entrepreneurial branches of alchemy
followed.

In
the late 15th century, Marsilo Ficino translated the Corpus
Hermeticum and the works of Plato into Latin. These were previously
unavailable to Europeans who for the first time had a full picture of the
alchemical theory that Bacon had declared absent. Renaissance Humanism and Renaissance Neoplatonism guided alchemists
away from physics to refocus on mankind as the alchemical vessel.

Curiously
enough, in the instruction booklet for Super Mario Bros. for the NES, we find
this:

One day the kingdom of the peaceful mushroom people
was invaded by the Koopa, a tribe of turtles famous for their black magic. The quiet, peace-loving
Mushroom People were turned into mere stones, bricks and even field horse-hair
plants, and the Mushroom
Kingdom fell into
ruin.[Italics added--W.G.]

The
games are fun to play, we will admit it.But no one should be naïve enough to think there is not, at least on some
level, something more going on here than simply an entertaining round of run
and jump.

--

Holy
Ælfred the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the
Souð!